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The Lebanese Civil War revisited

review by Paul Chaderjian The Bullet Collection by Patricia Sarrafian Ward Graywolf Press If depression is imprisoned and unexpressed rage, the trauma, rage and scars of the Lebanese Civil War is finally being addressed through the new literary voice of a generation of survivors like novelist Patricia Sarrafian Ward. In her debut novel, "The Bullet Collection," those who witnessed the annihilation of the Paris of the Middle East come to life to address the psychological effects of bombs, sniper fire, shelling, air raids and violent bloodshed. Sarrafian Ward, a Lebanese native who moved to the US in 1987, effortlessly captures the history and images of a catastrophe through the minds and hearts of one Lebanese family, whose typical and atypical idiosyncrasies are a true reflection to thousands who witnessed, escaped or simply ignored the reality of a violent and heartless war. While some lost their homes and wealth, others lost their loved ...

Beirut, Genocide and trauma

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--> Review by Paul Chaderjian The Daydreaming Boy By Micheline Aharonian Marcom Riverhead Books, Penguin Group Literature crosses into uncharted boundaries with Micheline Aharonian Marcom's genius introspection of the psychology of an Armenian Genocide survivor five decades after the great catastrophe. More than a just another book, more than just another survivor story, more than scenes and dialogue, "The Daydreaming Boy" is a like prayer, an homage, a poetic mantra of images, thoughts, sounds and feelings. It's a hymn that flows like music, like a waterfall or like a desperate jump into an uncharted ocean of emotions. "The Daydreaming Boy" sways and lullabies, informs and challenges, races into the past and to the future. It invites the reader into a dream state, where capturing a reader's attention is no longer the object and empathy is not just a longing but a reality. This literary daydream is a collective trance state ...

The Lebanese Civil War revisited

review by Paul Chaderjian The Bullet Collection by Patricia Sarrafian Ward Graywolf Press If depression is imprisoned and unexpressed rage, the trauma, rage and scars of the Lebanese Civil War is finally being addressed through the new literary voice of a generation of survivors like novelist Patricia Sarrafian Ward. In her debut novel, "The Bullet Collection," those who witnessed the annihilation of the Paris of the Middle East come to life to address the psychological effects of bombs, sniper fire, shelling, air raids and violent bloodshed. Sarrafian Ward, a Lebanese native who moved to the US in 1987, effortlessly captures the history and images of a catastrophe through the minds and hearts of one Lebanese family, whose typical and atypical idiosyncrasies are a true reflection to thousands who witnessed, escaped or simply ignored the reality of a violent and heartless war. While some lost their homes and wealth, others lost their loved ones or their...

Sayat Nova reaches three million U.S. viewers

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Nune Yesayan’s music featured on “The Shield”   by Paul Chaderjian May 19, 2007 On Tuesday, May 22, an estimated audience of at least three million Americans and an unknown number of viewers worldwide will hear Sayat Nova’s “Patkert Tamamov Kashats” on the FX channel’s hit police drama series “The Shield” starring Michael Chiklis. Bringing Sayat Nova alive for 21st-century audiences is Armenia’s modern-day minstrel, Nune Yesayan.   “This is the second time ‘The Shield’ uses Nune’s music,” says executive producer of Prime Entertainment Garbis Titizian. “‘Tamam Ashkhar,’ also from Sayat Nova, was used on June 8, 2004. That was episode 314 on season three, and this week’s show is number 517 in season six.”   The music-placement agency pitching Nune’s music to Hollywood is called NOMA Music. NOMA executive and former recording-industry insider Michael Wyner says Nune was referred to him when producers of “The Shield” were looking for Armenian music three years ago. When the p...

At the intersection of literature and journalism, Mark Arax stands tall

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* A profile of the reporter, wordsmith and historian By Paul Chaderjian History, great characters, human drama are all elements that flow out of the pen of Mark Arax, who has been telling some of the most interesting and untold stories while working as a reporter at the Los Angeles Times for more than two decades. Mark Arax, considered one of the top journalists at the Times, is also a literary figure in his own right - a modern-day scribe, who was born into the most sensational Armenian stories of the 20th century. He could not help but investigate the story of his family, his people, his native California and turn them into literature, through a unique voice, a narrative voice that is Saroyanesque in spirit, Steinbeckian in scope and as epic as any modern scribe can be. After working in the LA Times offices in Southern California as a reporter from 1984-1990, what made Mark an overnight literary celebrity in his hometown of Fresno was a book he wrote about the murder of h...

More than music, a debut album speaks of parental support

- 11 Degrees of Love with zero degrees of separation by Paul Chaderjian A few years before the start of the devastating Civil War in Lebanon - when the Paris of Middle East, the jewel of a city, Beirut, was the capital of the Armenian Diaspora - two young college students named Seta Harboyan and Hratch Simonian, barely 20, began a legacy – perhaps unknowingly. Their legacy will be celebrated this weekend, once again, with the release of their daughter's debut record album, 11 Degrees of Love. > Back story From 1972 to 1976, Seta and Hratch hosted and produced the daily Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society radio program called "Haygagan Radiojam." With the then-modern and now-ancient reel-to-reel recorders, the couple - not yet a couple then - would wheel their dinosaur recording machine to Armenian elementary schools, record choirs, conduct interviews and rebroadcast them on Lebanese national radio. One afternoon, I stared at these celebrities with...

Arthur Ispirian: Inspiring the world through music

Jazz singer releases two new albums by Paul Chaderjian YEREVAN – In the dark of an Armenian winter’s night, the temperature has dipped to below freezing. Rooftops are covered with a blanket of snow, sheets of ice coat sidewalks, and a low cloud embraces the city in a light fog. While most Yerevanis are asleep in their warm beds, Armenia’s most endearing male vocalist is wide awake. Meet Arthur Ispirian. Musician. Singer. Composer. Popular performer. Award winner. By day, Ispirian is the music program coordinator for the Cafesjian Center for the Arts. At night, he dials up his muses and dedicates at least four hours to writing, recording and producing albums, which are loved in Armenia and throughout the Diaspora. “My interest in music started when I was ten,” says Ispirian. “My father brought home a stereo system with a turntable, and I began collecting the music that spoke to my heart.” Among the illegal vinyl records Ispirian collected and spent hours listenin...